The aim is to build a new space integrated with the routes of the Caen Memorial in the appearance of a cylindrical building intended to accommodate a 360° museum projection.This new building will provide an essential transition between the different routes proposed by the Caen Memorial; the museography will, among other things, emphasise the major role of the Disembarkation of 6 June 1944 in the history of Europe since the end of the Second World War. In this sense, the project reinforces the request for inclusion of the Beaches of the Disembarkation, Normandy 1944 on the World Heritage List. Indeed, located in the associated historical area defined in the context of the application for registration file, the Caen Memorial is considered to have a primary place in the set of memoriel vectors which, while tracing the great hours of the Disembarkation and the Battle of Normandy, is placed at the service of its designation. Built on a bunker that served as a divisional command post to the German army, inaugurated in 1988 and symbolically marking the completion of the reconstruction of the Norman capital, the Caen Memorial explores the history and memorial issues of the 20th century in order to bring to its visitors keys to understanding the present world.